Men's Volleyball

Bisons Bounce UNB

The Varsity Reds stand together ahead of Saturday's match against the Manitoba Bisons. The No. 2 seeded Bisons beat UNB 3-0 in the consolation semi-final at the U SPORTS men's volleyball championship, in Edmonton. (U SPORTS/Univ. of Alberta)

Mar 18, 2017

(EDMONTON, AB) Once the top-ranked team in the country, the Manitoba Bisons regrouped after a devastating opening-round loss to host Alberta and advanced to the consolation final at the 2017 U SPORTS men's volleyball championship with a straight-sets win over the UNB Varsity Reds, in Edmonton.

The Bisons rolled to a fairly comfortable 3-0 win over UNB (25-20, 25-15, 25-22) that punches their ticket to Sunday's consolation final.

Devren Dear led the Bisons with 13 kills and seven digs, while Ken Rooney's 2.5 blocks were a game high. Evan Jackson, who has been the Bisons' most dominant player at times this season, had nine kills, while Adam DeJonckheere chipped in eight and a game-high four service aces.

With seven fifth-year seniors, the Bisons had championship aspirations all season after rolling to a 21-3 regular season record in the Canada West Conference. When that dream fell off the rails with a 3-1 defeat in front of a raucous home Alberta crowd on Friday, head coach Garth Pischke didn't know what to expect. "It's really tough. I had no idea how we were going to come out in this game," he said of playing for the right to advance to the fifth-place game.

"I was hoping they would show a little bit of pride and pride in themselves as a team. Each guy, rather than just going out and playing hard, now they're playing for their teammates and respect. We were relaxed," said Pischke. "That allowed us to let the game flow and maybe be one or two plays ahead, rather than panicking in each situation. I thought we were a lot tenser last night."

The Varsity Reds, champions of the AUS after a 9-8 regular season, suffered their own disappointment on Friday, falling in the first round for the third-straight year, this time to UBC.

"It's very difficult, but there are no slouches at this tournament this year," said head coach Dan McMorran, whose squad lost in five to Saskatchewan a year ago, despite leading 2-0. "It's probably the deepest field it's been in a number of years."

"We know every game's going to be a battle. If you have your 'A' game, there's a good chance you're going to be competitive. If you're not there, there's a good chance you're going to lose them."

That summed up Saturday's loss for UNB, too. They were unable to take advantage of the glimmers of hope Manitoba offered in a match they more or less controlled from start to finish.

"We're disappointed, for sure," said McMorran. "We knew we were coming out and playing a very strong Manitoba team.

"There were times we had a couple point lead and made a couple unforced errors there. Our leads dissipated pretty quickly," he added. "There were times we were down a couple points and battled back, but once again weren't able to be consistent enough at those stages."